Showing posts with label indulgence for Rosary Prayer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label indulgence for Rosary Prayer. Show all posts

Saturday, December 27, 2025

Full List of Catholic Indulgences (ദണ്ഡവിമോചനം) Plenary & Partial


Catholic Indulgences: A Comprehensive Guide

(Plenary and Partial Indulgences Explained in detail for the Faithful)

Introduction

We see some Catholic faithful often spending long hours in Perpetual Adoration Centres, praying and worshipping the Lord in sacred silence. We also see many others participating fervently in community Rosary prayers, while some faithful sincerely ask:

“What happens if I pray the Rosary in my home?”

There is a great spiritual difference here that many Catholics are not fully aware of.

Hidden within these sacred spiritual practices—when performed while observing certain conditions—lies an invaluable spiritual treasure. These are the Indulgences that our Holy Mother Church, by the authority given to her by Christ Himself, lovingly grants to her children for their spiritual growth and sanctification.


 What Is an Indulgence?

An indulgence is the remission before God of the temporal punishment (the mother Church gives a reduction or cancellation of the earthly consequences or Purgatory time owed for all sins committed whose guilt is already forgiven, often through Sacraments such as Holy Confession, Prayers or good works, acting as a form of spiritual debt relief to sins whose guilt has already been forgiven.

“An indulgence is a remission before God of the temporal punishment due to sins whose guilt has already been forgiven.”
(Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1471)

Indulgences do not forgive sins.
Sins are forgiven only through:

Indulgences remove the temporal punishment (of the sin) that remains even after sin is forgiven.


 Types of Indulgences

There are two kinds of indulgences:


 General Conditions for a Plenary Indulgence

To gain a plenary indulgence, all of the following conditions must be fulfilled:

  1. Sacramental Confession
    (within about 20 days before or after the indulgenced act)

  2. Holy Communion 

  3. Prayer for the intentions of the Holy Father (1 Our Father, 1 Hail Mary, 1 Glory be to)

  4. Complete detachment from all sin, even venial sin

  5. Performance of the indulgenced work

⚠️ If any one of the above condition is missing, the indulgence becomes partial.

👉 Only one plenary indulgence per day can be gained
(except at the moment of one's death).


 PLENARY INDULGENCES

(Selected & commonly practiced indulgences)

 Eucharistic & Liturgical Life


 Sacred Feasts & Liturgical Seasons

  • Christmas Day – devout participation in the Holy Mass at Midnight

  • Easter Vigil or Easter Sunday

  • Pentecost – public recitation of 'Come Holy spirit, Creator Blest'

  • Corpus Christi – participation in the Eucharistic procession

  • Sacred Heart of Jesus – public Act of Reparation

  • Divine Mercy Sunday, under prescribed conditions


 Marian Devotions

  • Rosary recited devoutly under required conditions

  • Renewal of Marian Consecration on its anniversary

  • Visit to a Marian Shrine on its feast day, with prayers


 Acts of Faith & Christian Commitment

  • First Holy Communion (for the communicant)

  • Priestly First Mass (for the newly ordained priest)

  • Golden, Silver, or Jubilee anniversaries of priestly ordination

  • Public renewal of baptismal promises during the Easter Vigil

  • Participation in a spiritual retreat lasting at least three full days


 Works of Mercy & Penance

  • Devout visit to a cemetery:

    • From November 1–8 (for the souls in Purgatory)

  • Visit to a Church or oratory on All Souls’ Day

  • Charitable assistance to the dying, with proper disposition


 At the Hour of Death

A plenary indulgence is granted at the moment of death to a faithful who:

  • Habitually prayed during life

  • Even if no priest is present

(Use of a crucifix or cross is recommended.)


 PARTIAL INDULGENCES

(General Norm)

A partial indulgence is granted to the faithful who, with a contrite heart:

 Acts of Prayer

  • Any approved prayer recited devoutly

  • Short aspirations such as:

    • “Jesus, I trust in You”

    • “My Lord and my God”

  • Making the Sign of the Cross with faith

  • Reciting the Angelus, Regina Caeli, or Divine Mercy Chaplet


 Acts of Penance

  • Voluntary self-denial

  • Patient endurance of suffering

  • Offering daily trials to God with love


 Works of Mercy

  • Visiting the sick or elderly

  • Helping the poor and needy

  • Teaching the faith

  • Consoling the sorrowful

  • Counseling the doubtful


 Participation in Sacred Functions

A partial indulgence is granted for devout participation in:

  • Priestly ordinations

  • Religious professions

  • Episcopal consecrations

  • Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament

  • Public novenas, missions, and communal prayers


⚠️ Important Points to Remember

  • Indulgences may be applied:

    • To oneself

    • Or to the souls in Purgatory

  • They cannot be applied to other living persons

  • Indulgences are never automatic

  • Interior devotion and sincerity are essential


 Conclusion

Indulgences are a tender expression of the Church’s mercy, guiding the faithful not merely to avoid sin, but to grow in holiness, charity, and deeper union with Christ.

What appears to be a simple Rosary, a quiet hour of Adoration, or a faithful participation in liturgy, when done with devotion and proper disposition, becomes a powerful instrument of grace, healing the soul and assisting even the souls in Purgatory.

“The Church, like a loving Mother, opens the treasury of Lord Jesus Christ for the spiritual good of her children.”